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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  September 27, 2023 1:00am-2:01am PDT

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hello there and a warm welcome to our viewers joining us in the united states and around the world. i'm bianca nobilo. >> i'm max foster. just ahead on "cnn newsroom" -- >> a wedding tragedy in iraq. at least 100 people are killed. >> real blow to trump. >> the judge finding that he engaged in fraud for a decade. >> if you want to get to donald, the way to do it is through his bank book. >> thousands of migrants have crossed the border. >> sophia remembers saying
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good-bye to loved ones. live from london, this is "cnn newsroom" with max foster and bianca nobilo. >> it is wednesday, september 27, 9:00 a.m. in london, 4:00 a.m. in new york, 11:00 a.m. in northern iraq where a wedding celebration has turned in to tragedy. at least 100 killed and 150 others injured afteoafter a fir broke out at a wedding hall. a guest says the bride and groom are devastated but are fine. >> firefighters are searching for survivors and the prime minister says officials will, quote, do everything they can to help those affected by the sad incident. salma abdelaziz is following developments here in london. what more are we learning from authorities and eyewitness accounts over what unfolded? >> this is very much still
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ongoing. but what we do know is last night there was this huge wedding celebration for this young couple. eyewitnesses say 1,000 people gathered in this one venue, this one huge hall. again according to eyewitness accounts that i've heard, in a moment where the couple were slow dancing, spark lers and fireworks were going off inside the hall and that caught the ceiling on fire that was decorated with highly flammable materials and xt tthe exterior the building was covered in material that was highly in-flammable and illegal. it essentially made it a continuti tind tinderbox. and according to iraq civil defense, in a matter of moments the whole building was on fire, parts of it collapsed. and people trapped behind these portions unable to escape. that is why you are hearing from the health ministry that some of
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those who died, died due to suffocation, unable to get out of that building. we do have very preliminary reports here i think on the death toll and injuries. at least 100 killed, at least 150 people wounded. they are being spread out across multiple hospitals. this is a massive tragedy. no single hospital can take all of the victims. iraq's prime minister is on the way to the region. emergency services have been activated. but again, just a massive tragedy and one that some guests will feel could have been avoided if the building code was followed, if this flammable material wasn't coating the exterior of this building. >> the area is no stranger for tragedy and you know that firsthand because you visited. >> yes, this is an area that in 2014 was taken over by isis. of course it has a predominantly christian population. as you can imagine that forced
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many of those families to flee. the area was slightly definite invest -- absolutely devastated. and when we went into the area, you just saw the devastation again. so this is very much a place that has tried to find life again in the last few years since the isis period and a place that is also rebuilding. so there will be a question mark over corruption. allegations of corruption have long plagued iraqi officials. many of these guests will ask why is illegal building material used on this wedding hall venue that led to the deaths of at least 100 people. >> salma abdelaziz, thank you so much. another legal loss for donald trump. a new york judge has found the former u.s. president and his adult sons liable for fraud after providing false financial statements for roug ss for roug.
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>> they are accused of inflating values by up to $270 million. the judge also canceled the trump organization business certification in the state. >> the a.g. is also trying to stop them from doing business in new york for five years. >> the judge said a discrepancy of this order of magnitude by real estate developer sizing up his own living space of decades can only be considered fraud. here is what one cnn legal analyst had to say about the decision. >> this was a summary judgment motion which was in effect the judge saying there is no reasonable question of fact even viewing the facts of this case in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. so let's just assess it from trump's perspective, that is what the judge is doing in the motion, saying even under those circumstances, there is no
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question of fact, it is not out of the question that this gets appealed, gets affirmed exactly as -- you know, in the form that it was released here. >> cakara scannell has more details. >> reporter: this is a huge loss for donald trump and his family and his family business. the judge finding that he engaged in fraud for a decade by inflating the value of some of his marquee properties on financial statements that were provided in a number of business transactions. and the judge saying that donald trump's explanation for how he came up with the values for some of his assets, he called it a fantasy world, not the real world. specifically he singled out trump's apartment at trump tower here in manhattan. trump inflated the value of that property including just the mere square footage by three times. something that he did acknowledge and the judge saying that that massive discrepancy could only mean fraud. now, he also said that he was ordering certificates of business to operate in new york
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state be canceled and that he would put in place a receiver to dissolve the business. exactly what that will look like remains unclear at this point. there is a lot of confusion even among the parties about how that will play out, but it could significantly reshape what the trump organization looks like and whether it has a footprint in new york city. >> his son eric trump who essentially leads the company on a day to day basis said that both the judge and the attorney general are trying to destroy their company. trump's attorney in this action said today's outrageous decision is completely disconnected from the facts and governing law. while the full impact of the decision remains unclear, what is clear is that president trump and his trump willappealate rem. they think the judge has not implemented correctly what claims would be covered. so they are hoping that the appellate court will narrow the scope of what the judge can look
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at saying that certain claims fell outside the statute of limitations. we're expecting a ruling on that this week. so right now the trial in limbo, but currently scheduled to start on monday. donald trump posted his own response to the judge's ruling online, accusing the judge of, "doing the bidding of the new y york attorney general." >> and trump is calling on help from the highest courts in new york and the federal level for help. michael cohen his former attorney says the ruling was effective because it hit donald trump where it hurt the most, his wallet. >> if you really want to get to donald, the way to do it is through his bank book, not by saying he's a narcicisstic so he is i dsociopath, he is not 6'3"d he is not 215 pounds. you go after the wallet. once you start hitting the bank book, that is what really gets to him. >> one trump's most yoit spoken
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critic is a former staffer and she's warning that another trump presidency would be a danger to democracy. cassidy hutchinson worked as an aide to thump'rump's chief of s. >> and she spoke to jake tapper about the threat that trump is now posing. >> for years we have not held donald trump accountable to the things that he says. when he strokes those vitriol comments like general milley, we need to take a them seriously. people have been holding him accountable for the past year, but obviously not accountable enough because we're in a position right now where it is looking more likely than not that he could be the republican nominee. and he has also been indicted four times. to me it is sad that we're in this place where we're looking at somebody who has executed
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this horrible assault on our democracy and we are continuing to give this person a platform. that is not what with we should stand for as americans. donald trump is the most grave threat that we will face to our democracy in our lifetime. and potentially in american history. >> when he says things like he wants to use the department of justice to go after his enemies and like he did on truth social the other day that he wants to curtail freedom of the press for certain channels and that sort of thing, you take him literally. you think he actually means it and in a second term he would do it that. >> i think donald trump in a second term would not have guard rails. i think we saw that at the end of the first term with how things played out after he lost the election. he violated our constitution in multiple ways. it is completely fine to wage -- or to file lawsuits, but what is not okay is when you threaten and assault the constitution and our institutions of government.
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i would not put it past donald trump, jake, to put those institutions of government in a worse position than they were in in the first term. >> cassidy hutchinson speaking there to jake tapper. donald trump scheduled to give a speech to auto workers in detroit today but the head of the striking auto workers union said he will not meet with the former u.s. president saying trump blamed their i didn't know during the 2008 recession and during his 2016 campaign, discussed moving jobs to the south where workers are paid less. >> trump will be in michigan the same day as the second republican national committee debate. but is he not going to participate. instead chris christie, ron desantis, mike pence and others will make their case to voters. >> president biden did something tuesday that no u.s. president has done before, he visited a union picket line. he traveled to michigan to show solidarity with striking autoworkers who walked off their jobs in a dispute over wages,
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pensions and other issues. kayla tausche reports. >> reporter: president biden making history using the picket line as the bully pulpit. >> you earn a lot more than you get paid. >> reporter: standing with unite the autoworkers nearly two weeks into a strike backing their calls for a 40% raise. >> you deserve the significance raise. the working class people. >> reporter: for biden who had vowed to stay out of contract and legal talks, it is a political tight rope to bolster a core constituency. >> i'm proud to be the most pro union president in american history. >> reporter: the president in june kicking off his 2024 campaign flanked by dozens of unions endorsing him, but one was missing, united auto workers whose newly elected leader had just slammed the white house for awarding ford 9 billion saying
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the last time the federal government gave the big three $9 billion, the companies did the same thing, slashed wage, cut jobs and undermined the industry that for generations created the best jobs for working families in this country. since then, biden aides have hosted shawn fain and the white house has ensured fit loans would prioritize union jobs. fain who invited biden to michigan but hasn't endorsed him yet has high hopes. >> we know the president will do right by the working class. >> reporter: fain says unions are having a moment. >> whether we're writing movies or performing tv shows, whether we're making coffee at starbucks, whether it is nursing people back to health, we do the heavy lifting. we do the real work. >> reporter: and americans agree. an august gallup poll found support for unions at 67%, heist since the 1960s. and 75% approval for uaw.
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but former president trump also vying for the working class vote which he won in 2016. making a wednesday visit to the wolverine state and accusing biden, his likely opponent, of riding his coattails. >> he is selling our automobile company, everything right down the tubes. so i announced that i'm going to michigan and then he announced 20 minutes later i'm going to michigan. >> reporter: the white house denied that former president trump's visit to michigan played any role in biden's decision to go. and the white house also tried to walk back comments by biden that he supported the 40% wage increase the workers were seeking. one official told reporters after reviewing the audio that the president did say, yes, i think that they should bargain for that. kayla tausche, cnn, the white house. u.s. senate has unveiled a biden stopgap bill to avoid a looming government shutdown. >> the senate bill would keep the government funded until mid november and includes more than 6 build in ukraine aid,
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something many house republicans oppose but house speaker kevin mccarthy says chamber will consider a separate bill with border provisions likely on friday. >> i'll bring up the cr regardless. because remember what it is. this is a stopgap funding to keep government open and securing the border. i don't know that anyone is opposed to that. i think that is where people would want to be. >> speaker mccarthy's strategy to focus on border issues would set up a massive confrontation with the senate over immigration on the eve of the shutdown deadline. calls are growing for senator menendez to resign following the accusations of bribery. including his longtime friend senator cory booker. >> but menendez refusing, insisting instead that he is innocent and he is also dodging questions about whether or not he will run for re-election. >> menendez and his wife along
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with fthree new jersey businessmen are accused of taking bribes to help the government egimts. t egypt. >> federal investigators say menendez and his wife accepted cash, gold bars, luxury convertible, mortgage payments and other such considerations. months' long strike by hollywood writers came to an end this last hour. board of the writers guild gave its members per mission to go back to work. but union members will vote next week and could still in theory refuse to ratify the agreement. >> settling the writers strike is just one part of getting hollywood back to work. sag-aftra is also striking but has not reached an agreement with the studios just yet. still to come, as new york grapples with the migrant crisis, a judge orders a shelter housing asylum seekers to be say indicated. and alarm bills are ringing
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for jpmorgan chase over the inflation and the federal reserve. jamie dimon's prediction for interest rates just ahead. and federal trade commission and 17 states are suing amazon saying it stifles competition. but can they force a change here. we'll hear from a legal expert.
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in a setback for new york's mayor, a judge has ordered the city to remove migrants from a shelter on staten island that was once a private school. the judge said the mayor violated local laws on zoning regulations. the decision comes after a lawsuit was filed by a local resident whose property is adjacent to this former school. >> and the order bans the use of the site to house migrants. the city started moving them there in august amid a record number of asylum seekers. and the surge is also affecting other countries. thousands desperate migrants stop at the border of venezuela on their journey to the u.s.
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>> but as david culver shows us, they must survive dire situations if any want to have a better life. >> reporter: as you touchdown in southern mexico, be ready to share the road with migrants. we spot group after group marching north. many of those who just illegally crossed into mexico head here, this outdoor park turned migration processing center. in it folks camping out for day, some week, waiting to climbing asylum in mexico or to get transit documents to pass through legally. or to sign up for -- some aren't quite sure what they are signing up for, but they do it anyway. rafael from outside havana, at 26, he sold his house, left behind his 6-year-old son and traveling north with his dad. he wants to go legally into the u.s., so he wants to go through it process here, get his documentation and get to the northern border and eventually
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cross. >> reporter: he wants to pave the way for the rest of his family to follow. and this man travelled from honduras with his wife and their two young boys. he's done this before. four years ago he lived in minnesota, said he was painting water towers, water tanks, and he said that he was deported from minnesota to honduras and now making the trek again. in this already impoverished state, they are feeling the migrant strain. it is overflowing. a lot of it is just waiting to get into the office and processed eventually. you have people from all over. we've met people from haiti, cuba, honduras, and here for many an unknown period of time. last year some 77,000 migrants applied for asylum in mexico, this year on track to be nearly double that. a record high. not everyone sees it as a bird. some of the mexican locals, all these people who are not from
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mexico, are a business opportunity. look over here, you can see some of the stands that are set up to sell food, vendors. here it is an hour's drive or day walk from the river. guatemala on one side, mexico on the other. and in the shadows of the official crossing between the two countries, an arrmada of rafts ferrying group after group. [ speaking in a non-english language ] she says it is hard to eat. and you can tell that they have just such a rush of emotion when they get to this side. some come and a continue on. others like this woman and her husband using this as a moment to catch their breath. [ speaking in a non-english language ] while they are having their first child, she is five months
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pregnant. days earlier they had crossed the darien gap. all they own now fits in a small bag. they were robbed and held at gunpoint for hours. but that does not compare they say with what they saw. [ speaking in a non-english language ] oh, my god. they are describing passing through the darien gap and they said several people had already passed away, a lot of kids they saw their remains and children who were abandoned. those images haunt her. describing the journey, but admits her tear-filled pain, little ones lighten the load. a little shampoo left in his hand. his 12-year-old sister sophia helping clean it out as then they turn the questions on me.
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[ speaking in a non-english language ] she says i'm older than their dad. curiosity brings their sin links and cousins. and one takes over the mic telling me why they left venezuela. [ speaking in a non-english language ] the venezuelan economy is bad. and as they share, disturbing memories surface. [ speaking in a non-english language ] talking about, these are children mind you, having gone through the darien gap and the bodies that he is describing. seeing a blond woman. sophia's pain as she remembers saying good-bye to loved ones. [ speaking in a non-english language ] heartbreaking the friendships that she's lost.
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so much behind them, yet far from over. more than 1,000 miles until the u.s. border. david culver, cnn, tapachula, mexico. >> an amazing pace. jpmorgan chase agrees to multimillion-dollar settlements over its ties to jeffrey epstein. and hope and rental prices are soaring across the united kingdom and no relief in sight. we'll hear how families are coping with that stress.
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goli, taste your goals. learn more today. welcome back to "cnn newsroom." i'm bianca nobilo. >> and i'm max foster. let's bring you up-to-date with the top stories this hour. a search for survivors is ongoing in northern iraq after a fire broke out after a wedding ceremony. and a u.s. judge has found donald trump and his adult sons
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liable for freiaud after inflatg the value of hir pro their prop for decade. jamie dimon of jpmorgan chase says if the federal reserve keeps raising interest rates to bring down inflation, there will be stress in the system and he says that the world is not ready for 7% interest rates. the current benchmark overnight rate is just about 5% and the fed is predicting another increase by the end of the year. u.s. financial markets are looking to rebound from a terrible tuesday. the dow fell in its worst one day drop since march. nasdaq and s&p each lost about 1.5%. futures have a bounceback. lookings for for the open later on today. and the uk is grappling with financial insecurity. according to the latest economic
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report, private home rental prices are growing at record high rates. >> across great britain, 42% of adults paying rent or mortgages say they are finding it difficult to afford those payments. isa soares spoke to one family who is feeling the pressure. >> it's been a really, really tough six months. i've lost sleep over it because you wonder where the next bill is coming from. >> reporter: it has been a year of constant stress for the greenwood family. >> you see the cost of your electricaling up and up. and it is not that you are doing anything different on the day to day. are the >> reporter: and with that the cycle sets in. matthew lost his job as schools cut budgets and his wife who works 12 hour shifts is straining to be a nurse. and in between parenting and job
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searching, he is counting the pennies as the cost of living crisis squeezes the middle class. did you ever consider, i mean have you considered, with rental prices going up and inflation, food inflation, moving in with family members? >> yeah, i think that this ways on the cards last year. we really put it to the board that it would be something that we'd have to do because we didn't know where the extra money was going to come from to cover the increasing rent. >> reporter: matthew's rent went up last year like many others around the uk facing a similar problem. since july 2022, private rental costs increased here by 5.3%. and now more than a third of adults are finding it difficult to afford their rent or mortgage payments. the charity which advises people in financial difficulty is seeing firsthand the scale of the problem. >> we're seeing people get in to
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get, let alone holiday funds or saving for their children's university, they have already been spent, they are borrowing for family members. so people are making really hard choices about not only their long term future but even months away. >> reporter: and that is the case for matthew. who is dreading another rent hike. >> there is no guarantee that i'll be able to afford the extra 50 pounds a month. people say it is only 50 pound as month, you can cut back on some things. >> but what else can you cut back on? >> there is nothing else to cut back on. we are strict to the bare minimum. >> reporter: just a few days after our interview, matthew says his worst fears have become a reality. matthew, we saw your text message. give us a sense of what your landlord has told you. >> so we had the message from him a couple days after you left basically saying that he was really sorry and he's got to put the rent up. so that is going up another 50 pounds. >> another stressful news for
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you. >> worst case scenario, we'll have to move out. but realistically, i don't know. i don't know at the moment. >> reporter: isa soares, cnn, london. jpmorgan chase has agreed to pay $75 million to settle a lawsuit filed by the u.s. virgin islands alleging the bank enabled jeffrey epstein's sex trafficking crimes. a federal judge will have to approve the settlement. $30 million would go to support charities working to end human trafficking and support survivors. >> epstein died by suicide in jail in 2019 after he was arrested in federal charges of sex trafficking dozens of underage girls. jpmorgan chase does not concede liability but says it deeply regrets any association with epstein. u.s. government and 17 states are suing amazon. >> they accuse the online retailer of using its market size and power to manipulate
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third party sellers and raise prices for consumers. for example, they say amazon insists the merchants who sell on its platform not offer a lower price on other sites. that effectively compels merchants to use its delivery and logistical services. >> people are paying higher prices. consumers are paying more than they otherwise would. small businesses are having to pay 50% amazon tax right now. so ultimately the complaint is seeking to restore the lost promise of competition, greater competition will mean lower prices, better quality, better selection. and greater innovation. and that is ultimately what this case is about. >> but amazon says the government's lawsuit could end up causing the very problems that it hopes to solve. this is not the federal trade commission's only lawsuit against amazon also. it is suing the company and several executives over its prime memberships. global demand for fossil
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fuels likely on to spaek by 2030 but not nearly enough to limit the rising temperatures to 1.5 celsius. the agency says that it would require a 25% decrease in demand for fossil fuels in less than seven years. >> the report also estimates that investments in clean energy worldwide would need to more than double every year by 2030 to keep the target temperature. scientists consider a warming of 1.5 degrees the threshold beyond which extreme weather conditions and shortages will have a catastrophic impact. still ahead, the plot thickens surrounding a top russian admiral. ukraine claims he was killed in an attack on cry me, a but moscow says -- rather not says but provides potential proof that he could still be alive. plus valmpire drones targeting russian forces. what makes them so ominous and effective.
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top russian admiral reportedly killed in ukrainian missile strike may not be dead after all. russian defense ministry released footage tuesday that appears to show viktor sokolov
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in a meeting. >> cnn can't independently confirm if it was real or when or where it was recorded. ukraine says it is clarifying the fate of the plaque sea commander. ukraine earlier said sokolov and a 33 others were killed in a missile strike friday. >> clare, you have a new video. >> yes, a new video that has just come out in the last hour on the ministry of defense tv channel.p apparently shows vikt sokolov speaking to reporters. he is talking in generic terms about how the black sea fleet is fulfilling its orders, how much attention the heroism of the soldiers is getting. and then he talks about how they received a brigade, marine brigade, received a military order which we looked and that particular military order was given at the end of august. now, they were given more medals yesterday, so it is possible that he is referring to that. as of yet this is not i don't
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think conclusive evidence, although clearly russia is trying to get the message out with this video on top of the men industry of defense video that surfaced tuesday that he is still alive. >> or just confuse it. >> right. >> but are they claiming a date or time for the new video? >> no date or time. but now both manipulating or trying to control the flow of information. and russia has an interest in the world believing that he is still alive given this is admiral of one of the four fleets of the navy. >> and in terms of the reaction from ukraine, because they obviously said that they killed him, did they say that very decisively? >> they did. and now they are saying that they are clarifying the situation, they pointed out that russia sort of urgently as they put it got out these images to show that she was alive and now
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ukraine special forces are saying that they are clarifying it.he was alive and now ukraine special forces are saying that they are clarifying it. new defense minister didn't confirm or deny it, but said it would be good news if he was dead and clearly this speaks to the phase we're in in the war where the operations in crimea that ukraine has been carrying out, focus on the black sea trying to prevent russia from having free reign. >> so do they mean investigating so as to clarify? because it is an interesting choice of words. >> yeah. >> clare, thank you so much. mean type the kremlin is down playing the arrival of the first abrams tanks saying that they will turn on the battlefield like other weapons.t abrams tanks saying that they will turn on the battlefield like other weapons. fred pleitgen has this exclusive report. >> reporter: rolling into battle as night falls, ukraine's army
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attacking in the east around bakhmut. for the ukrainians, this is an extremely important but also very complicated and potentially very dangerous mission and we'll be located very close to where the russians are. we're with the frontline drone unit called code 9.2. the ukrainian made vampire. the crew attaching the bombs as artillery whistles over our head. it is fully night vision capable and plays a sound track showing it means business. ♪ the team leaders call sign is groove and a he confirms that because ukraine didn't have a modern air force, tonight they are the air force. the drones see in the night like in daylight, he says. we see the infran infantry, we
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vehicles, cannons, everything we need to destroy. and he also says russians have returned to the battlefield around bakhmut. yes, there is wagner here too, they swiftly change their commanders and have returned here he says. we're breaking through their line of defense and hitting them well. as the drone takes off, the battle is already well under way. the ukrainians using western extended range artillery shells and cluster munitions to attack russian ground forces. groove is targeting the russians. oh, something is burning he says. his unit also managing to take out a russian-made battle tank by dropping several bombs on it. the ukrainian army now starting to push forward. our photojournalist dan hodge films powerful explosions as
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armored vehicles advance in the moonlit night. we're now hearing a lot of fire, a lot of outgoing fire, a lot of incoming fire as well as ukrainians are trying to move forward and they say they want to take a key road away from the russians. but the russians are fighting back, firing flares to unmask the ukrainian advance and hit k kyiv's forces. groove remains unfazed, hunting a russian tactical vehicle before destroying it. the code 9.2 drone team often hunts russian armor here, recently even destroying a modern t-90 tank in the highly complex operation. after more than a half dozen missions, the drone returns a final time. but as we try to get away from the battlefield, a tire bursts on our humvee.
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no time for a spare, we push on. we just witnessed an extremely tough battle between the russians and ukrainians, both sides going at it for hours with very heavy weapons. and the area where we were, shells landed close to there on various occasions. now we're heading back to base. hobbled but rolling after a long night on one of ukraine's most dangerous front lines. fred pleitgen, cnn, bakhmut. now to armenia where there is a growing humanitarian crisis and influx of refugees. >> the armenian government now says more than 47,000 people from that gin anagorno-karabakh region defeated separatists. >> and it means that more than one third of the ethnic armenians from that gore know
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o nagorno-karabakh have fled the region. and there is oois only one road so it is pretty jam-packed. britit new . and fashion show back but with some major changes. s
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baseball hall of famer brooks robinson has died according to a statement from his family and the baltimore orioles. born in little rock, arkansas robinson joined the os in 1955 and defended third base for 23 seasons. they included two world series championships in 1966 and 1970 where he was also named mvp. brooks robinson was 86 years old. to the nfl where colin kaepernick is asking the new york jets to sign him to their practice squad. the 34-year-old hasn't played in an nfl game in more than six
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years. he drew controversy for kneeling during the national anthem to protest racial injustices and police brutality. the jets starting quarterback aaron rodgers was injured in the first game of the season and backup zach wilson has been shaky filling in. united nations is slamming france's decision to ban athletes from wearing hijab at the 2024 olympics. human rights commissioner says no one should impose on a woman what she needs to wear or not wear. >> the comments come after french sports minister said on sunday that french athletes will not be allowed to wear a hijab at the summer olympics next year arguing in favor of the country's quick are a geenl of secularism. the iconic fashion show is back after a five year absence but gone are the super models wearing over the top li lingeri
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and anxious and ad angel wings. >> instead it is a show on prime video that spotlights shows in foyer regions. critics say it feels a bit disjointed. have you seen it? >> i haven't, no. british museum asking the public for help in finding and recovering ancient art factsi artifacts stolen last month. but they have not released details about what was stolen. how do they find them if they don't release details? >> they say anyone with information should contact them. the register says 300 have been identified and set to be returned. you make a good point. i'd like to get involved in the mystery and retrieval effort. >> this was a guy working there reselling them, damaging them?
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>> they haven't been explicit, but clearly they have some issues. and finally panera bread are jumping on the tiktok trend by promoting a menu inspired by the roman empire. a surprising number of husbands and boyfriends said they thought about women when they see -- >> have you seen this? >> no, but i do think about the roman empire daily. sglt one i sa. >> one i saw was a wife asking the husband do you think about the roman empire. yeah, every day. but now fans can't stop thinking about some of its iconic food such as macaroni and cheese, sin i cinnamon crunch bagel and or course the caesar salad. >> that does it for us. "early start" is up next.
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you're probably not easily persuaded to switch
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mobile providers for your business. but what if we told you it's possible that comcast business mobile can save you up to 75% a year on your wireless bill versus the big three carriers? it's true. plus, when you buy your first line of mobile, you get a second line free. there are no term contracts or line activation fees. and you can bring your own device. oh, and all on the most reliable 5g mobile network nationwide. wireless that works for you. it's not just possible. it's happening.

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